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Bing announced they will be launching their own version of a mobile friendly algorithm in the upcoming months for the Bing mobile search results. This is similar to Google’s mobile friendly algorithm in so many ways but in Bing’s case, they won’t be giving a date with this announcement and they are saying relevancy, no matter what, will always be more important than if a site renders nicely on mobile devices. (1) The Bing mobile friendly algorithm will launch in the upcoming months, we don’t know when, but they promised to give us a date prior to launching it. (2) It looks at UX (user experience) on mobile devices like Google’s algorithm does, so make sure your site works well on mobile. (3) If you have the mobile friendly label on Bing mobile, you are set: (4) A new tool will be coming out from Bing also to tell you if you are mobile friendly or not, and if not, how to get mobile friendly. (5) It seems Bing and Google care about the same UX aspects when it comes to mobile friendly. (6) Sites that do not render on mobile devices will suffer (i.e. fully Flash sites). (7) It is on/off, you are either mobile friendly or not. (8) It is real time, so as soon as BingBot crawls the page, it will be picked up. (9) Bing wants to communicate that this will NOT be a geddon, it will be rolled out with a lot of communication and…

I don’t know anyone who does it, but perhaps you do. I have a distant memory of disks arriving in my mailbox for free, a whiny noise that sounded like it was coming from an alien drone and thinking: “Why do people do this?” But perhaps you’re one of the 2.1 million people who still have AOL dial-up service and actually pay for it. AOL’s quarterly earnings report, published Friday, revealed discreetly that 2.1 million people are still dialing up and paying AOL around $20 a month for the privilege of accessing the Internet. Dial-up is infernally slow. It’s about as narrowband as a contemporary connected mortal could imagine and far beyond anything they could tolerate. Just to compare, in January the FCC redefined broadband as 25 megabits per second, though the average speed in the US is 10 Mbps. Dial-up is 56 kilobits per second. (As a quick refresher: kilo- anything is much smaller, or in this case slower, than mega- anything.) About 70 percent of Americans have broadband at home, as of a September 2013 survey, the latest figures from the Pew Internet Research project. So who might these people be? I have contacted AOL to ask whether it could offer a breakdown and will update, should I hear. One is left, therefore, to speculate. An obvious view would be that many of these people are senior citizens. For them, perhaps, the price is comfortable. Even more comfortable is the security of knowing how something works because they’ve…

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April 21st was the day that Google made the big change in its algorithm to penalize websites that dont have a responsive design (doesn’t load on a all mobile device properly), and drop their listing on Google Search! Most small businesses cannot afford or don’t know this is happening and will suffer them most. Please get in touch with us if this is the case, as we can help you fix your site so it complies and is fully responsive as soon as possible: richard@bluefusiosolutions.com http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-32380223

This month Google announced that they’ll change the way they represent URLs in search results. This post explains what is changing, what this means for you. Well-structured URLs offer users a quick hint about the page topic and how the page fits within the website. To help mobile searchers understand your website better when we show it in the mobile search results, today we’re updating the algorithms that display URLs in the search results to better reflect the names of websites, using the real-world name of the site instead of the domain name, and the URL structure of the sites in a breadcrumbs-like format. http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2015/04/better-presentation-of-urls-in-search.html